74 Finance&economics TheEconomistJune11th 2022
though,thingsgetexaggerated.Investors,
including speculative punters, now ac
countforoneinfivehousepurchases,ac
cordingtothecentralbank.
Thegovernmentwantstocoolthefer
vour.Ithasannounceda twoyearbanon
property purchases by foreigners. More
important,developersarerampingup.Un
itsunderconstructionareata recordhigh.
Tony Stillo of Oxford Economics, a re
searchfirm,reckonsCanadawilladd2.35m
newhomesthisdecade,outstrippingan
expected1.9mnewhouseholds.
InCarletonPlace,thefastestgrowing
towninCanada,halfanhouroutsideOtta
wa,boththeinsatiabledemand andthe
heftysupplyresponseareondisplay.Ina
newneighbourhoodbeingbuiltbyOlym
pia Homes,buyers movein as soon as
homesareready.MarkFillier,aresident
sinceNovember,saysheisstillwaitingfor
contractorstoaddthefinishingtouches.
“Theyjustgetthehousesupandmoveon
tothenextone,”hesays.Attheendofhis
streetbuildersareworkingondozensof
newhomes.
Thekeyquestionishowtheproperty
sector morebroadly—from buildersand
buyerstolendersandregulators—willad
justtoa weakermarket.OxfordEconomics
predictsthatCanadianhousepricesmay
fallbyabouta quarteroverthenexttwo
years.Thatwouldprobablycountasanor
derlycorrection,leavingpricesabovetheir
prepandemic level. Developers would
continuetobreakgroundonnewhomes.
Andthe financialsystemwouldremain
solid.Canadahaslongusedrulestoinsu
latebanksfromthepropertysector:buyers
seeking a mortgage must, for instance,
havedepositsofatleast 20%onhomes
thatcostmorethanC$1m($795,000).
Atthesametime,though,Canadahas
vulnerabilities.Householddebtisworry
inglyhigh:about185%ofdisposable in
come.Giventhatbackdrop,fallinghouse
pricescoulddeala bigblowtoconsumer
confidenceandweighonspendingmore
generally.Canadamaynotbeonthinice.
Butit isskatingintohazardousterritory.n
Whoa,Canada!
G7countries,realhouseprices
2000 average=100
Source:FederalReserveBankofDallas
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
2000 05 10 15 21
France
UnitedStates
Japan
Italy
Britain
Germany
Canada
Interest-raterises
Treasury seekers
W
hentheFederalReserveraisesin
terest rates, the effects are felt far and
wide. Capital shifts in and out of the huge
stock of global dollardenominated assets.
The Fed is expected to act forcefully over
the next year, raising rates to around 3%,
the highest level since early 2008. But this
time the response of the biggest foreign
holders of dollar assets, particularly those
in Asia, could hold surprises. A burgeoning
group of large private institutions is
changing, and potentially complicating,
the picture.
Ten years ago “official” foreign inves
tors—mainly central banks managing their
currency reserves—held $3.4trn in Ameri
can Treasuries, about threequarters of all
Treasuries held abroad. Anyone wanting to
understand the huge flows in and out of
dollar bondstherefore kept an eagle eye on
the big reserve managers.
There hasbeen plenty of movement of
late. China’s reserves—the largest single
foreign stash of Treasuries—fell by $68bn
in April, 2% of the total and the largest
monthly drop in more than five years. Ja
pan’s reserves declined by $31bn, the big
gestever monthly fall. India’s reserves
shrank by $26bn in March, the most since
the market panic of October 2008. Those in
South Korea and Taiwan have fallen, too.
Reserve managers are a tightlipped
bunch, and rarely explain precisely why
their holdings have changed. But some of
the recent declines are likely to reflect sim
ple valuation effects. The dollar has
strengthened; as a result, holdings denom
inated in other currencies, such as the eu
ro, are worth fewer dollars. Some reserve
managers have also intervened in the mar
ket by selling their holdings in order to
limit currency depreciation.
Yet this presents an increasingly partial
picture of capital flows. Asian private insti
tutions that cater to ageing populations,
such as pension funds and insurers, have
exploded in recent years. The assets of Tai
wan’s life insurers alone, for instance, have
more than doubled in less than a decade.
Rather like central banks, these tend to buy
and hold safe government bonds and liq
uid corporate debt.
As a consequence, the share of Treasur
ies owned by official investors has fallen,
to 58% of all Treasuries held abroad. Priv
ate foreign holdings make up the rest, and
have risen from $1.1trn to $2.8trn over the
past decade. Sales and purchases of Trea
suries by private investors can swamp
thosemadebyofficialinvestors,asrecent
trendshavemadeclear.Officialinvestors
sold$36bninTreasuriestoAmericanpunt
ersinthefirstthreemonthsofthisyear.
Thatlooksmeaslycomparedwiththepur
chasesmadebyforeignprivateinvestors.
Theysnappedup$235bninTreasuries,the
biggesthaulinanyquarteronrecord.
Thisdivergencemakessense.Reserve
managers get out of Treasuries when
Americaninterestratesclimb,toprotect
their currencies froma stronger dollar.
Privateinvestors,enticedbyjuicieryields
onlongdatedbonds,divein.Evenquasi
publicinstitutionslikeJapan’sandSouth
Korea’smammothstatepensionschemes
havegoalsandrisktolerancesthatdiffer
fromreservemanagers.Nonetheless,be
causemostofthenewlyimportantinstitu
tionsgrewrapidlyduringa periodoflow
inflationandrockbottominterestrates,
predictingtheiractionsascircumstances
changewillnotbeeasy.
Things are murkiestof allin China,
wheretheaims offinancial institutions
and the government’s foreignexchange
managerscandovetail.In 2020 and2021,
forinstance,China’sofficialreserveswere
curiously stable, raising analysts’ eye
brows.WhilemostotherAsiancountries
withlargetradesurpluseswerereporting
surgingreserves,China’srosebylessthan
5%.ThatraisedthepossibilitythatChina
wasusingits banksto interveneinthe
market:AlexEtraofExanteData,a research
firm,andBradSetseroftheCouncilonFor
eignRelations,a thinktank,havepointed
tothesurgingvalueofChineselenders’net
foreignassetsasevidenceofhiddeninter
vention.Sofarthisyear,though,thereis
littleindicationthat Chinahasusedits
statebankstodisguiseintervention.
Interpretingtheshiftsincapitalflows
washardlyeasywhenit involveddecipher
ingtheactionsofrelatively taciturnre
servemanagers.Thenew,morecrowded
fieldofinvestorswithvariousholdings,
strategiesandobjectiveswillgiveanalysts
anevenbiggerheadache.n
S INGAPORE
Mighty Asian financial institutions are
reshaping global capital flows
Depleted defences
Foreign-exchange reserves
Change compared with three months ago, $bn
Source:HaverAnalytics
200
100
0
-100
-200
-300
2020 21 22
Japan China
Taiwan India South Korea